Song birds have to deal with cover artists too

Washington, Sep 9 (ANI): Just like great singers among humans, birds too have to deal with cover artists who copy songs.

A new research has revealed that some bird species have evolved to sing the same tune as their rivals, in order to compete effectively.

Led by Dr. Joseph Tobias and Dr Nathalie Seddon from the Edward Grey Institute, University of Oxford, the research team analysed the calls and songs of two antbird species that were living side-by-side in the Amazon rainforest- the Peruvian warbling-antbird and the yellow-breasted warbling-antbird.

The study was aimed at investigating their similar songs, and, in particular, at testing the theory that the birds’ songs could become increasingly similar to enable effective communication between competing species.

The above notion has attracted controversy as many scientists have argued that convergence in territorial or mating signals results in needless confrontation or crossbreeding and the creation of hybrids.

“Biologists have long been fascinated by convergence in ecological traits as it offers tangible evidence of evolution and the forces of selection by which it operates, but until now there is no clear evidence that social competition between animal species can produce convergent signals. We examined this idea by analysing the structure and function of songs in two birds which we knew to be strong social competitors,” said Tobias.

The researchers studied the species in Peru and Bolivia at one site where they lived together, and two sites where they lived in isolation.

Firstly, they recorded three sets of signals-songs, calls, and plumage colour of both species (including a total of 504 songs from 150 individuals).

Later, they played them back to individuals of each species to test the significance of songs of both types.

The results showed that territorial songs of both species were extremely similar particularly where they lived together, such that territorial birds treated songs of both species as equally threatening.

In the meantime, they discovered that non-territorial signals like calls and plumage were highly divergent.

“In effect, the territorial songs of these birds are more or less interchangeable in design and function. Given that they last shared a common ancestor more than 3 million years ago, it is almost equivalent to humans and chimpanzees – which diverged around 5 million years ago – using the same language to settle disputes over resources” said Tobias.

“Our results provide the first compelling evidence that social interaction can cause convergent evolution in species competing for space and resources.

They also suggest that while competition drives convergence in territorial songs, this is offset by divergence in non-competitive signals such as plumage colour to promote species recognition and reduce the chance of interbreeding,” he added.

The study has been published in Evolution.(ANI)

Musharraf terms his meeting with Saudi King a success

Lahore, Sep 7 (ANI): Former Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf has said that his recent meeting with Saudi King Abdullah was a success.

“I was accorded full protocol during my visit to Saudi Arabia to meet King Abdullah, I deem him as my elder brother and can contact him whenever I want,” a private TV channel quoted Musharraf, as saying.

He said during his visit, he discussed the recent political situation of Pakistan at length with the Saudi king, adding that the king had concerns about the situation in Pakistan.

Talking to the channel, Musharraf said the army operation against the Taliban in Malakand had proven successful.

“The operation was undoubtedly successful. The Pakistan Army has always rendered sacrifices and played a vital role to safeguard the territorial integrity of the country,” he said.

Earlier, the ‘royal’ treatment being given to Musharraf during his Saudi Arabia visit has his opponents worried.

The special treatment has sparked speculations that Riyadh is trying to use its influence to ask the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) to shun its demand for Musharraf’s trial under the Article Six of the Constitution.

Sources said King Abdullah sent his special airplane to London to fetch Musharraf.

Reports regarding Saudi Arabia cracking its whip on the PML-N and other anti-Musharraf parties has probably forced PML-N to come out with clarifications. (ANI)

Survey says Chinese, Japanese viewing each other more positively than last year

Beijing/Tokyo, Aug 26 (ANI): A new survey has revealed that the Chinese and the Japanese are seeing each other a bit more positively than last year.

The survey, jointly sponsored by the China Daily and Genron NPO, a Japanese think tank, found that a majority of people in both countries believe Sino-Japanese relations are important.

The survey is a part of the Beijing-Tokyo Forum, a yearly gathering of Chinese and Japanese senior government officials and NGO members, who believe in building up better communication and understanding between the two countries.

The survey, now in its fifth year, divided people into two groups – ordinary citizens, and intellectuals – in both the countries.

The Chinese intellectuals mainly comprised university students from famous well-known institutions like the Peking University. Previous members of Genron NPO formed the Japanese “intellectuals”.

Nearly thirty-six percent ordinary Chinese said they have a “very good” or “relatively good” impression of Japan, which is a 5.5-percentage-point increase over last year.

About 45.2 percent of Chinese students saw Japan in a positive light, a two percentage points increase on the previous year’s figures, whereas, only 26.6 percent of Japanese think positively about China.

However an overwhelming majority of Chinese and Japanese said Sino-Japanese relations were “important” and also wanted the leadership of the two nations to increase talks and enhance mutual cooperation.

Nearly 60 percent of ordinary people and 42.4 percent of Chinese students saw no progress in Sino-Japan relationship over the last year

In Japan, 64.8 percent ordinary people and 53.4 percent intellectuals saw no improvement in bilateral ties this year.

The surveys found historical issues and territorial disputes still remain points of tension between the two nations.

The Chinese are often unhappy over official Japanese visits to Yasukuni Shrine, and the Nanjing Massacre still remains a historical problem.

About 47 percent of ordinary Japanese appreciated Chinese help in fighting the global economic crisis, compared to just 30 percent last year. Japanese intellectuals believing Chinese economic growth to be better for the Japanese leaped from 65.8 percent to 81.4 percent this year.

Cooperation in East Asian issues, economic affairs, energy, environment and climate change should be the top priorities of the talks between the two countries according to the people.

Almost 91 percent of the students and 85.7 percent ordinary people in China and 95.8% intellectuals and 74.8% ordinary people in Japan saw civil exchanges as “important” or “relatively important”.

The survey also found that the people of the two countries found out about each other’s countries mostly through TV news and newspapers. (ANI)

Territorial Army personnel seized with fake currency worth Rs.1.70 lakh

Poonch (Jammu), Aug.24 (ANI): Two Territorial Army personnel were seized with fake currency worth Rs.1.70 lakh on Monday.

According to police sources, Mohammad Ashraf and Arif Hussain were nabbed in Poonch, Jammu. Further details are awaited. (ANI)

Maldives can always count on India as a well-meaning friend, says Antony

Male’ (Maldives), Aug 22 (ANI): Defence Minister A K Antony has said India and Maldives are a ‘shining model of how two countries of differing sizes can cooperate with each other as equals’.

Speaking at the concluding session of the India-Maldives Friendship Week here last night, he said: “India would like to share views on issues like climate change, economic development as well as problem areas such as drug trafficking, extremism and the threat of terrorism that is afflicting the region as well as the larger world.”

“We would be happy to work with Maldives in these areas to evolve collaborative and cooperative approaches,” he added.

Antony said: “Both countries have been extremely conscious of each other’s sovereignty and territorial integrity and, at the same time, realize that their destinies are intertwined. Both countries have always emphasized the mutuality of interest and support each other in numerous ways- at the bilateral, regional and International level.”

“India is proud of this partnership and engagement and deeply value the friendship of the people of Maldives. In this quest, the people of Maldives can always count on India as a sincere and well-meaning friend,” he added.

Referring to the democratic transformation that has taken place in Maldives in recent years, he said India would be happy to assist Maldives in any way that is possible in strengthening democracy and democratic institutions that are being built in Maldives.

The event was attended by the top leadership of Maldives including President Maohammed Nasheed.

Meanwhile, Nasheed has agreed to a request from Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh to be the chief guest at the Technology Development and Transfer Meeting on Climate Change to be held in New Delhi on October 22.

The request of the Prime Minister was conveyed by Antony to Nasheed in Male’ on Thursday. (ANI)

PM arrives in Egypt for XVth NAM Summit

Sharm el-Sheikh (Egypt), July 15 (ANI): Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh arrived in Egypt late on Tuesday night to attend the two-day XVth Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Summit.

Issues like global economic downturn, terrorism, climate change and food security are expected to be on top of the agenda at the Summit.

Other summit themes are international solidarity for peace and development and current economic and financial crisis. It would also focus in comprehensive manner on global regional and sub-regional issues, besides issues relating to development, human rights and social issues.

Dr. Singh will address the plenary session of the NAM Summit, and has already underlined India’s commitment to help revitalise the NAM, which had a renewed role to play in the emerging world order following the end of the Cold War.

On the sidelines of the Summit, Dr. Singh will meet his Pakistani counterpart Yousuf Raza Gilani on Thursday morning. He will also have other bilateral meetings.

A NAM First Ladies’ Summit would also take place at the initiative of Egypt in which the Prime Minister’s wife, Gurusharan Kaur, would participate. The theme of this meeting would be Women in Crisis Management – Perspectives and Challenges, Best Practices and Lessons Learned.

Egypt’s First Lady Suzane Mubarak would anchor the meeting that would focus on the role of women in the context of the global economic and food, health and humanitarian crises. Heads of UN Agencies: the FAO, the WFP, the WHO, and the ITU are expected to make brief statements during the two separate sessions of the First Ladies’ Summit.

The NAM is an international organization of states considering themselves not formally aligned with or against any major power bloc.

The movement is largely the brainchild of Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, Gamal Abdul Nasser, former president of Egypt and Yugoslav president Josip Broz Tito. It was founded in April 1955 and as of 2007, it has 118 members.

The purpose of the organization as stated in the Havana Declaration of 1979 is to ensure “the national independence, sovereignty, territorial integrity and security of non-aligned countries” in their “struggle against imperialism, colonialism, neo-colonialism, racism, and all forms of foreign aggression, occupation, domination, interference or hegemony as well as against great power and bloc politics.”

They represent nearly two-thirds of the United Nations’s members and comprise 55 percent of the world population, particularly countries considered to be developing or part of the third world. By Smita Prakash (ANI)

Rs. 500 crore allocated for rehabilitation of internally displaced persons of Sri Lanka

New Delhi, July 6 (ANI): Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee has proposed to allocate Rs. 500 crore for the rehabilitation of the internally displaced persons and reconstruction of the Northern and Eastern areas of Sri Lanka.

Presenting the Union Budget for the year 2009-10 in Lok Sabha today, Mukherjee said: “The Government is committed to ensure that the Sri Lankan Tamils enjoy their rights and legitimate aspirations within the territorial sovereignty and framework of Sri Lanka’s Constitution.”

“The Ministry of External Affairs is working closely with the Sri Lankan Government in this regard,” he added. (ANI)

Govt. to act ruthlessly against malpractices in defence contracts: Antony

New Delhi, May 27 (ANI): In the toughest ever message yet to be issued by a Defence Minister to stem corruption in armed forces procurements, A K Antony today said the Government “would not hesitate to ruthlessly cancel contracts,” if malpractices are found in any acquisition.

Antony asked organisations such as the CII and the FICCI, etc to help the government to maintain transparency and integrity in defence contracts, and added that the government would not tolerate “wheeling dealing or corruption.”

“We are determined that we need procurements, (but) we cannot compromise on transparency. At times, we have found certain manipulations, malpractices; we cannot ignore that so we ruthlessly cancelled certain major ticket items.”

“In the future also if there are any malpractices we will not be lenient, we will take the harsh lane,” Antony further said.

The government cancelled at least two defence deals during Antony’s previous tenure as Defence Minister, including the Eurocopter light utility helicopter deal owing to some malpractices.

Signifying the government’s assurance in rooting out corruption and to give a strong warning to private contractors, Antony added, ” They should not try to bribe our people. We will not be lenient. We will take strong action.”

The Defence Minister was speaking at Defcom India 2009 seminar themed on “Informatics for Defence Transformation and Technology Development in the Information Age”.

The seminar saw participation of over 400 delegates and 100 plus companies.

Antony said the Government has consciously taken a decision to minimise the country’s dependence on import of defence systems and platforms, and agreed that more products should be sourced on the basis of “buy and make” rather than ‘buy’ category alone.

He lamented that nearly 70 percent of defence weapons and systems are still being imported and only 30 percent are being indigenously produced.

Antony said the turbulence in our immediate neighbourhood puts the political stability in our country in an even better perspective.

He said the need to modernise our defence forces to preserve our territorial integrity in the face of asymmetric and unconventional means of warfare couldn’t be overemphasised.

Antony called for a synergy of efforts of the armed forces, the industry, the academia and research and development establishments to transform our defence forces to a network centric force.

The transformation of defence forces is a continuous process, and the overall aim should be to bring about sustained competitive advantages in warfare, Antony said.

Referring to the new challenges before the Armed Forces, both in terms of the concepts involved and the material needed, Antony said it is neither possible nor feasible to have equipment and systems on stand-by for all conceivable variants of modern military conflicts. By Praful Kumar Singh (ANI)

Malay Indian body asks govt. not to support Lanka’s ‘non-interference’ draft

Kuala Lumpur, May 24 (ANI): Malaysian Indian Congress (MIC) president Seri S. Samy Vellu has said the Malaysian government should not support a draft resolution put forth by Sri Lanka at the United Nations.

The draft tabled by Sri Lanka calls the member nations not to interfere in its internal matters.

“Tamils in Malaysia constitute 1.4 million of 1.8 million Indians in the country. As such, their feelings have to be respected. There has to be a war tribunal in Sri Lanka to bring those people who perpetrated crimes against the Tamil community in their war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam,” The New Straits Times quoted Vellu, as saying.

According to reports, Malaysia was among the few countries which backed the Sri Lanka’s non-interference policy.

The draft is being backed by 12 countries such as India, China, Pakistan, Bahrain, Bolivia, Cuba, Egypt, Indonesia, Malaysia, Nicaragua, the Philippines and Saudi Arabia.

Earlier, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay supported the calls West countries for an independent inquiry into possible war crimes.

Pillay had said that the small region might have become a ‘killing field’.

However, amid severe criticism, Sri Lanka decided to table its draft before the UN Human Rights Council stating the ‘principle of non-interference’ in internal matters and respect for its sovereignty, territorial integrity and independence. (ANI)

Sino-US navies try to resolve maritime discords

New Delhi, May 15 (ANI): The Chinese and US navies have been searching for ways to “alleviate disagreements” over international law on maritime rights, a senior military source has said.

The source admitted the two militaries still disagree on how to interpret the international law concerning maritime waters. But both sides have “expressed their views candidly in the latest round of military exchange.”

The China Daily quoted the source as saying that in the latest exchange, US naval operations chief Admiral Gary Roughead and Chinese Navy chief Admiral Wu Shengli held talks in Qingdao last month during a sea parade to mark the 60th anniversary of the PLA Navy.

But some experts said the US navy will not stop spying activities in the western part of the Pacific, and reconciliation at sea may not be reached easily.

“The US has always wanted to maintain its influence in Asia through military means. It has conducted military activities around the Taiwan Straits and the East China Sea, and now wants to expand to the South China Sea,” said Professor Yuan Peng, an expert at the China Institute of Contemporary International Relations.

He added that the US is keen to see Southeast Asian countries in territorial disputes with China so that it can retain its influence in those countries and contain China’s rise.

Wang Hanling, a researcher on maritime affairs and international law at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said Sino-US disputes at sea mainly arise from the different interpretation of items related to the “freedoms of navigation and over flight in an exclusive economic zone.”

US Admiral Robert Willard, new commander of the Pacific Fleet, said on Tuesday that the US is attempting to overcome disagreements with China after frank discussions between high-level US officials and their Chinese counterparts over recent confrontations at seas.

The two nations do not see eye to eye on the issue of maritime rights, but “we’re going to have to work our way through it … so they don’t continue to escalate,” Willard said on the sidelines of a regional naval conference in Singapore. (ANI)

Guinness Book of World Records names Kashmir as the largest dispute in the world

Islamabad, May 15 (ANI): The Kashmir dispute between India and Pakistan has been registered in the Guinness Book of World Records as the largest militarized territorial dispute in the world.

The Guinness Book of World Records used the Central Intelligence Agency’s (CIA) world fact book to name the Kashmir issue, the longest dispute between two countries, The Daily Times reports.

In the latest edition of the Guinness Book of World Records, page no. 137 of the ‘wars’ section reads states : “According to the CIA fact book, the dispute between China, India and Pakistan for Kashmir region is the largest and most militarised dispute.”

India and Pakistan have fought three wars over Kashmir: in 1947, 1965, and 1999. India and China have clashed once, in 1962 over Aksai Chin

Since the 1990s, the Indian administered Jammu and Kashmir has been hit by confrontation between Kashmiri separatists, including militants who India alleges are supported by Pakistan and the Pakistan Armed Forces, and Indian Armed Forces which has resulted in thousands of deaths in the Valley. (ANI)

Pak Cabinet endorses operation against Taliban in Swat

Islamabad, May 9 (ANI): The Pakistan Cabinet on Saturday endorsed the ongoing military operation against the Taliban and other militants in the Malakand division of the country’s North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

In a media briefing following the cabinet meeting, Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani said the cabinet has decided to set up a PM fund for the affectees of military operation with a sum of Rs.200 million deposited.

Gilani said the directives had been issued to all Pakistani missions abroad to step up efforts for global assistance for Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs).

He also announced that the Benazir Income Support Program (BISP) and the ministry of health have been directed to take care of the IDPs.

He said a parliamentary delegation will be sent to variouis capital to project Pakistan’s viewpoint on prevailing situation.

The Prime Minister’s announcement came as the Pakistani Army continues to press ahead with a vigorous offensive against the Taliban militants who have taken control of a broad swath of territory northwest of the capital, sending tens of thousands of Pakistanis fleeing the fighting.

According to the New York Times, the exodus – by truck, car, foot and horse cart – has reached close to 200,000 people, forcing relief workers to erect new rows of tents in camps along the clotted road running south from the Swat Valley.

Relief officials said as many as 300,000 people were moving or preparing to flee.

The unfolding humanitarian crisis has prompted the Pakistani Army to move with caution against over 4000 Taliban militants in Swat, the epicenter of a power struggle over months between government forces and the militants.

Army officers said they were confronting the militants, as they have taken advantage of a peace agreement to seize control of much of the district and its government buildings.

At the military’s headquarters in Rawalpindi, Major General Athar Abbas made few claims of territorial progress on Friday. He said that helicopters strafed militants in Swat over the previous 24 hours, and that 140 militants and 7 Pakistani soldiers had been killed.

“They are on the run and trying to block the exodus of innocent civilians by preventing their departure through coercion,” Major General Abbas said.

Militant resistance in neighboring Buner, just 60 miles from Islamabad, has decreased considerably, Major General Abbas said. He said the military had lifted a curfew in Buner to allow civilians to escape toward Mardan and other areas. (ANI)

China protests Vietnam’s ‘illegal’ governor of disputed islands

Beijing – China on Tuesday protested Vietnam’s “illegal” appointment of a governor for the disputed Xisha islands in the South China Sea. “China has indisputable sovereignty over the Xisha islands and their adjacent waters,” foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said in a statement.

Vietnam’s April 25 appointment of a chairman of a People’s Committee for the islands – also known internationally as the Paracels, and in Vietnam as the Huyen dao Hoang Sa – was “illegal and invalid,” Jiang said.

The Chinese government has informed Vietnam of its position on the appointment, she said.

The Xisha group includes more than 30 islets, sandbanks and reefs spread out in an area of about 15,000 square kilometres.

China last month said it planned to send more naval vessels to patrol the islands and other disputed areas of the South China Sea to counter illegal fishing and “other countries’ unfounded territorial claims.”

The official China Daily quoted a senior fisheries official as saying the government faced new “challenges and complications” in the South China Sea, pointing to recent claims by the Philippines and Malaysia to disputed islands and a standoff with a US naval surveillance ship.

In mid-March, China sent its largest and fastest fisheries ship, the Yuzheng 311, to patrol the Xisha group and nearby disputed islands.(dpa)

Rampant alcoholism blamed for ragging in campuses

New Delhi, April 20 (IANS) A panel formed by the Supreme Court to probe the ragging and subsequent death of a Himachal Pradesh medical college student Monday blamed ‘rampant alcoholism’ for the spurt of ragging in educational institutions.

‘One of main reasons for violence (ragging) on the campus is rampant alcoholism, and it is recommended that that de-addiction measures be introduced in educational institutions,’ Additional Solicitor General Gopal Subramanium told a bench of Justice Arijit Pasayat.

Subramaniam made the submission quoting from the recommendations of the Raghvan Committee, which was formed earlier by the court to probe the malady.

The panel, which also included Justice Asok Kumar Ganguly, recommended a host of measures, including setting up of a hotline telephone service for the ragging victims to lodge the complaints or passing on information about ragging activities in educational campuses.

‘The union government in consultation with the University Grants Commission, Medical Council of India and All India Council for Technical Education and other similar regulatory bodies should set up a central crisis-hotline and anti-ragging database’ to be monitored by civil societies, said Subramanium, quoting the panel’s report.

The panel also stressed upon the ‘dire need’ to probe psychological aspect of the phenomena of ragging in educational institutions and sought appointment of a committee of psychologists and mental health experts for the job and to suggest remedial measures to tackle the malady.

‘There is a dire need to examine the psychological aspects of ragging, including its impact on young students and rationale behind seniors’ urge to rag and torment their juniors,’ said Subramaniam.

‘Ragging is similar to child abuse at home or at orphanages. Young men and women who are abused by their seniors under the pretext of ragging believe that the abusers are part of their extended family and automatically, in their minds, it becomes an internal family affair, and hence very rarely do students ever speak out against it,’ said the Raghvan panel report.

Pointing out that ‘substantial research has been carried out in Australia, Canada, the US and Ireland on the impact of abuse in schools, colleges and orphanages and other institutions’, the panel told the court that ‘the psychological scarring of ragging does not go away with time, but continues for many years, possibly through a person’s entire lifespan’.

The panel also doubted the sincerity of Medical Council of India’s efforts in curbing ragging in medical colleges and sought a probe into it.

It favoured entrusting a police station in-charge or the district’s superintendent of police directly liable to punitive measures for his failure to stop ragging in educational institutions within his territorial jurisdiction.

The panel made some Himachal Pradesh-specific suggestions, including appointment of a full-time hostel warden in various colleges educational institutions of the state.

It also favoured a probe into Kangra-based Rajendra Prasad Medical College and Hospital’s former principal Suresh Sankhyan’s ‘role in exacerbating ragging on campus, as well as his suitability as a faculty member and administrator’.

It was in this college that medical student Amann Kachroo had died March 8 following ragging by his four seniors. The apex court had taken note of the incident on its own.

After noting down various recommendations made by the Raghvan panel, the apex court sought the state government’s views to the suggestions and adjourned the mater for hearing on Thursday.
Indo Asian News Service

Meet the ‘luckiest man in the British Army ‘ who escaped bullet by only 2mm!

London, Apr 20 (ANI): A Brit soldier is being called the luckiest in the army after he survived a gun shot, which hit his helmet, but missed his head – by only two millimetres.

Private Leon ‘Willy’ Wilson from Manchester was knocked flat on his back by the impact of the shot while he was on attachment with 2nd Battalion of the Mercian Regiment (Worcesters and Foresters) in Afghanistan.

But, the 32-year-old Territorial Army soldier said he was left without a mark after the round tore through his Mark 6a helmet, made from several layers of Kevlar armour.

And now, defence bosses have declared him “officially the luckiest man in the British Army”.

The Ministry of Defence revealed that the incident occurred on April 10, when Wilson had been manning a machine gun during a battle with the Taliban in Helmand Province and was hit by the 7.62mm AK47 bullet.

“I took my finger off the trigger when the shot hit my helmet. I was knocked clean off my position and landed on my back. I had my eyes shut,” Sky News quoted him as saying.

In fact, Wilson, who is a self-employed electrician when not on active duty, had to ask another private next to him if he had been shot.

And he was back on the front within an hour after finding a new helmet.

The gun battle started after British and Afghan soldiers – who had just destroyed an insurgent bomb factory – were fired on after sheltering overnight in a compound.

Pte Wilson’s commander Captain Rob Agnew dubbed him the “luckiest private”, and added: “Willy’s a good lad – and a good soldier.” (ANI)

China, Vietnam leaders discuss trade and disputed islands

Beijing – Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao met with Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung Friday to discuss trade, economic cooperation and a territorial dispute in the South China Sea, China’s official Xinhua news agency reported.

There was dialogue but no sign of a resolution on the three archipelagos that both countries claim ownership to there.

“Vietnam is willing to properly solve the South China Sea issue in the spirit of mutual respect and consultation,” Xinhua quoted Dung as saying when he met Wen on the southern Chinese island of Hainan, where both were attending the Bo’ao Forum for Asia, a regional economic meeting.

Wen said China and Vietnam should safeguard stability in the area.

China and Vietnam have long claimed ownership over the archipelagos in the South China Sea, including the Spratly Islands. The area is an important shipping thoroughfare and rich in natural resources.

On the economic front, Wen said China would like to work with Vietnam to strengthen future economic and trade cooperation and maintain growth of two-way trade.

Dung indicated Vietnam is ready to sign a five-year economic and trade cooperation agreement.

“Chinese enterprises are welcomed to invest in Vietnam,” he was quoted as saying. (dpa)

London police suspend second officer over G20 behaviour

London – A British police sergeant has been suspended following the emergence of video footage of him apparently hitting a female protestor during the April 1 G20 summit demonstrations, the BBC reported Wednesday. The officer is the second to be temporarily removed from his post since the demonstrations pending an investigation by the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC).

In the latest video, the officer is seen to first hit the woman in the face as part of his efforts to restrain a crowd of protestors, and then take out his baton and strike her lower body when she confronts him to complain over the first strike.

A spokesman for London’s Metropolitan Police said that “the officer has been identified and suspended pending further investigation. The officer works as a sergeant in the territorial support group.”

The IPCC is already investigating the death of Ian Tomlinson, a newspaper vendor who died shortly after being knocked to the ground by an officer during the protests, although Tomlinson was not believed to have taken part in the demonstration.

The conduct of the police during the G20 protests has been widely called into question since the event, with accusations over the infringement of civil rights being made.

Shami Chakrabati, director of the human rights group Liberty was quoted by the BBC as saying over the latest case that it was difficult to understand what justified “a gargantuan police officer assaulting a smaller woman for having the audacity to complain.”

A spokesman for the opposition Liberal Democrat party called for a full-scale inquiry over the event. (dpa)

South Korea set to curtail North arms trade

SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korea is expected to announce as early as Wednesday plans to curtail the North’s suspected trade in weapons of mass destruction, further raising tensions with Pyongyang after the North vowed to quit nuclear disarmament talks.

North Korea said on Tuesday it would re-start a plant that makes bomb-grade plutonium in response to a U.N. rebuke over its launching of a long-range rocket 10 days ago.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has said its inspectors have also been ordered to leave North Korea.

In a move bound to ratchet up tensions, South Korea is poised to reveal it will soon join U.S.-led interception of shipments suspected of carrying parts or equipment for weapons of mass destruction. Pyongyang has said such an action would be considered a declaration of war.

The plan, called the Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI) and joined by 94 countries, would let South Korea stop and board North Korean ships sailing in its territorial waters when suspected of carrying arms or other illicit materials.

North Korea’s threat on Tuesday to quit six-party disarmament talks poses the first big foreign policy test for the Obama administration.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton criticized the expulsion of the U.N. nuclear inspectors as an unnecessary provocation but said Washington was ready to talk.

“Obviously we hope that there will be an opportunity to discuss this not only with our partners and allies but also eventually with the North Koreans,” Clinton said in Washington.

North Korea’s expulsion of U.N. nuclear inspectors is a major reversal of steps it took in 2007 halting the operation of the Yongbyon nuclear complex and allowing the IAEA in to seal facilities there.

INSPECTORS EXPELLED

The U.N. Security Council on Monday condemned North’s launch of a long-range rocket, declaring it was a violation of a U.N. resolution adopted in 2006 after the North’s nuclear and missile tests and ordered the enforcement of existing sanctions.

Shipments of energy aid to the North has slowed since last year because of a dispute over how to verify the North’s nuclear inventory under the disarmament deal struck by the South and North Korea, the United States, Japan, Russia and China in 2005.

Experts said the North could have its plant that separates plutonium from spent fuel rods up and running again in as little as three months.

Announcements like this from North Korea are part of a familiar pattern of behavior and as such it is not likely to be a destabilizing factor for regional economies.

Japan’s conservative Yomiuri newspaper sounded a warning that the six-way nuclear disarmament talks may be about to fall apart and pressed China, the North’s key ally and main benefactor, to do more.

“As the North’s largest trading partner and biggest supporter, we hope China will take every effective measure it can against Pyongyang, including a strict application of sanctions on the nation,” the daily said in an editorial.

China has called for calm and restraint from all sides in the six-party talks while expressing hope that the negotiations it hosts would resume.

New U.N. measures may cause Beijing to curb trade in a few items but some analysts said it is likely to maintain its flow of energy, grains and other materials that prop up the North’s broken-down economy.

(Editing by Nick Macfie and Jeremy Laurence)

Rescue off Somalia prompts calls for action

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The dramatic rescue of U.S. cargo ship captain Richard Phillips from Somali pirates on Sunday fueled calls for aggressive action to stop attacks off the Horn of Africa, including the arming of merchant vessels.

Others called for called for changes to international law that would make it easier to pursue and try pirates.

“We remain resolved to halt the rise of piracy in this region,” President Barack Obama said in a written statement after the rescue.

“To achieve that goal, we must continue to work with our partners to prevent future attacks, be prepared to interdict acts of piracy and ensure that those who commit acts of piracy are held accountable for their crimes,” he said.

The U.S. Navy ended the five-day ordeal of Richard Phillips, captain of the Maersk Alabama cargo ship, by killing three pirates who held him captive on a lifeboat. A fourth pirate was taken into custody.

Phillips was the first American taken captive in a wave of piracy that is rampant off the Horn of Africa, where Somali civil conflict has let the practice flourish for nearly two decades in an atmosphere of poverty and lawlessness.

“We’ve got to figure out a way in an international community to … arm the crews, increase the number of warships that are there on scene (and) reduce the abilities of the Somalis to have ships that are anchored off the coast in a safe haven,” Adm. Rick Gurnon, president of the Massachusetts Maritime Academy where Phillips was trained, told a news conference.

ARMING CREWS UNPOPULAR WITH SHIPPING COMPANIES

A military operation may be needed to clear out the pirate bases on land, he said, “I think the international community needs to seriously look at that.”

Republican U.S. Senator Tom Coburn said, “we’re going to have to be much more aggressive” against pirates. Speaking on “Fox News Sunday,” he said “a tremendous increase in resources” would be needed and other countries must share the burden.

U.S. military officials expressed caution.

U.S. Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Thad Allen said arming crews remains unpopular with shipping companies, who are concerned about liability or an arms race with pirates.

“That’s not what these mariners are trained to do,” Allen said shortly before the rescue on ABC television’s “This Week.”

He called instead for new international legal agreements to fight piracy, which often involves multiple questions of national jurisdiction.

“What you really have to have is a coordinating mechanism that ultimately brings these pirates to court,” Allen said.

The U.N. Security Council over last year authorized navies to chase pirates into Somalia’s territorial waters and later allowed land operations against pirate havens.

The United States, Britain and the European Union have struck agreements with Kenya for prosecuting captured pirates there, but Kenya has warned that it cannot be the only place for trials.

Vice Admiral William Gortney, head of the U.S. Naval Central Command, said the successful U.S. strike could possibly escalate violence. He said the conditions that give rise to piracy — failed governments, lawlessness and poverty — must be wiped out to end the threat.

“The ultimate solution to piracy is on land,” Gortney said in a Pentagon briefing from Bahrain.

(Editing by Alan Elsner)

India’s national elections to span four weeks

New Delhi – Elections in India, conducted once every five years, are generally held in a staggered manner to allow adequate security and logistical arrangements so the huge electorate, which nearly equals the population of Europe, can vote freely.

The polls, made a daunting task due to the expanse of India, are to be held in five phases from April 16 to May 13 to ensure the movement of millions of security and election personnel. Results were expected May 16.

In the parliamentary republic, citizens are charged with choosing who will run the federal and state governments. All Indians above the age of 18 have the right to cast a vote.

Since the country gained independence from British rule in 1947, there have been 14 general elections and more than 350 state contests.

India has a bicameral legislative structure with the Parliament consisting of the Lok Sabha, or lower house, and the Rajya Sabha, or the Council of States.

A total of 543 of the Lok Sabha’s 545 members are directly elected by popular vote to represent individual constituencies for five-year terms.

The number of parliamentary constituencies in a state depends upon the size and the population of the state. Two members are nominated by the president from the Anglo-Indian community.

In the Indian parliamentary system, the executive is subordinate to the legislature with the prime minister and his council being responsible to the Lok Sabha.

The executive, along with the Council of Ministers, is chosen from among the members of the winning party or the ruling coalition.

The Rajya Sabha has 245 members serving staggered six-year terms. Most members are elected indirectly by the state and territorial legislatures in proportion to the state’s population.

The polling is conducted by government officials and held in government schools and colleges as well as certain other state-owned venues.

The Election Commission has banned exit polls during the voting phase. Such surveys lost credibility after the 2004 election.

After the results are submitted, the president would invite the party or coalition that has won the most seats to form the government.

The new government might be required to prove its majority through a vote of confidence. It needs a simple majority of the 545-member lower house. (dpa)